The one annoying thing about living in nice houses. In the city i used to live, the grottiest slummiest areas of town had silly fast vigin fiber. Where i lived, every house was a highly listed building so there was no tearing up roads and walls for new cabling etc. I currently max out at 10 down 1.5 up.Reply

Call me an oddball, but when cooking, i don't wear jewelry or a watch, especially not a watch costing many hundred dollars. Why create the hassle of cleanup and possible risk of damage? Not to mention, someone willing to pay out for a smart watch, probably owns a tablet, which works perfectly as a recipe book and has a screen large enough that it can be placed away from any splishy splashy areas.

so that's two terrible use cases. They're really grasping at straws to try and justify this concept. Reply

I really hope that's true, and that it has Steam streaming and Bluetooth connectivity for controllers. All I've wanted since the Shield came out was a console version of it (just a box sans controller and screen). Maybe we'll finally get one.Reply

I don't know why Google expects anybody to use Cloud Compute Engine. Their prices for bandwidth are insane, they charge about 50x per gigabyte when compared to Linode, or around double what's charged by Amazon.Reply

Now that the issue of Android in automobiles is officially on the table, will AT please start paying attention to these questions in phone reviews- does BT even connect to a standard set of car audio brands? How useful is the Car Dock mode? How well do priority overrides between streaming audio, Nav and incoming calls work? How good is noise rejection on speakerphone on the highway?

As I've said over and over again, handheld use in autos is illegal most anywhere, yet these issues are ignored in every AT smartphone review.Reply